Putin: no plans for ‘tightening screws’ or pressure on civil society

Russian authorities will cooperate with civil society and always observe the constitutional rights and freedoms of citizens, President Putin has said at an extraordinary session of Russia’s supreme security body.

“We will support ourselves on the civil society, and we will
never allow a single thought that the development of our work in
all spheres was only allowed in order to tighten some screws. We
are definitely not taking this route. We are going to find our
very basic support in the civil society and nothing else,”
Vladimir Putin told the members of the Security Council on
Tuesday.

The Security Council is the top advisory body for key issues of
national security and sovereignty. Putin called an extraordinary
session on Tuesday due to the current crisis in Ukraine and
attempts by certain Western nations to blame Russia for the
military conflict in Ukraine and the recent downing of a
Malaysian passenger jet over territory controlled by Ukrainian
federalist fighters who oppose the Kiev regime.

The language of sanctions and ultimatums is being used more often
and the very definition of national sovereignty is being diluted,
the Russian President noted. He said that often external
political forces are using the so called ‘color revolutions’ in
order to destabilize the states and regimes that pursue
independent policies. The correct name for such ‘color
revolutions’ is anti-government coups and they are being provoked
and financed from abroad, Putin added.

“Of course they emphasize a country’s internal problems – but
there are always enough problems, especially in unstable nations
and states with complicated regimes. Of course there are
problems, but why use them for complete destabilizing and
eventual collapse of these countries? Recently we see this very
often in various parts of the world,” Putin told Russian
security officials.

The Russian leader added that the current events in Ukraine were
a typical example of such a scenario. Foreign instigators of the
coup had placed their bets on nationalist, neo-Nazi and
fundamentalist forces, but despite the hasty elections the power
has been grabbed by people who financed or conducted the coup
while the people who disagree with such development are now being
suppressed by military force, Putin said.

“There has been not a single attempt to hold
negotiations,” the Russian leader added.

Putin also said that at the moment Russia faced no direct
military threat to its sovereignty and territorial integrity, and
that he expected other countries to respect Russia’s national
interests and abstain from interfering with its internal affairs.

However, the Russian President promised an “adequate
response” to NATO’s constant expansion towards Russian
borders.